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Early Life
Eighteenth-century Sikh warrior who for
the first time seized territory for the Khalsa and paved the way
for the ulimate conquest of the Punjab by them, was born Lachhman
Dev on 27 October 1670 at Rajauri in the Punchh district of Kashmir.
According to Hakim Rai, 'Ahwal-i-Lachhman Das
urf Banda Sahib', his father Ram Dev, a ploughman, came of the Sodhi
sub-caste.
Lachhman Dev had a very tender heart and the
sight of a dying doe during one of the hunting excursions proved
a turning-point in his life. So strong was his sense of penitence
that he left his home to become an ascetic. He was then fifteen
years of age.
He first received instruction from a mendicant,
Janaki Prasad. At the shrine of Ram Thamman, near Kasur, he joined
Bairagi Ram Das and was given the name of Madho Das. Roaming about
the country for some years, he settled down in the Panchvati woods,
near Nasik. He learnt yoga from Yogi Aughar Nath and, after his
death, left Nasik and established a math (monastery) of his own
at Nanded on the left bank of the River Godavari.
Meeting with Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Here he had an encounter with Guru
Gobind Singh who happened to visit his hermitary on 3 September
1708, at the end of which he, as the chronicler records, fell at
his feet, pronouncing himself to be his banda or slave. Guru Gobind
Singh escorted him to his own camp, administered to him the vows
of the Khalsa and gave him the name of Banda Singh, from the word
banda he had used for himself when proclaiming his allegiance to
the Guru.
Blessed by Guru Gobind Singh who bestowed
upon him a drum, a banner and five arrows as emblems of authority,
and accompanied by five Sikhs - Binod Singh, Kahan Singh, Baj Singh,
Daya Singh and Ram Singh, he set out towards the north determined
to chastise the tyrannical Mughal faujdar of Sirhind.
Banda's Battles
As he reached the Punjab, Sikhs began to rally round his standard,
amongst the first to join him being Bhai Fateh Singh, a descendant
of Bhai Bhagatu, Karam Singh and Dharam Singh of Bhai Rupa and Ali
Singh, Mali Singh and other Sikhs of Salaudi. Ram Singh and Tilok
Singh, the ancestors of Phulkian rulers, provided material help.
On 26 November 1709, Banda Singh attacked Samana,
the native town of Jalal ud-Din, the executioner of Guru Tegh Bahadur,
and of the two executioners who had volunteered to behead Guru Gobind
Singh's two young sons, at Sirhind. A
fter the sack of Samana, Banda Singh occupied
Ghurham, Thaska, Shahabad and Mustafabad. The town of Kapuri, whose
faujdir, Qadam ud-Din, was notorious for his debaucheries and persecution
of Hindus and Sikhs, was razed to the ground.
Next came the turn of Sadhaura, whose chief,
'Usman Khan, had not only oppressed the Hindus but had also tortured
to death the Muslim saint, Sayyid Buddhu Shah, for having helped
Guru Gobind Singh in the battle of Bhangani. Banda Singh took this
long circuitous route awaiting Sikhs from the Doaba and Majha areas
to join his force before he attacked Sirhind where two of Guru Gobind
Singh's sons had met with a cruel fate at the hands. of Wazir Khan,
the Mughal satrap. Wazir Khan was killed in the battle of Chappar
Chiri on 12 May 1710, and on 14 May the
city of Sirhind was captured and given over to plunder.
Baj Singh, one of Banda Singh's companions,
was appointed governor of Sirhind. Banda Singh was now the virtual
master of territories between the Yamuna and the Sutlej, yielding
an annual revenue of thirty-six lacs of rupees. He made the old
Fort of Mukhlisgarh, in the safety of the Himalayas, his headquarters,
renaming it Lohgarh. He assumed the style of royalty and introduced
a new calendar dating from his capture of Sirhind.
He had new coins struck in the name of Guru
Nanak-Guru Gobind Singh. Besides the names of the Gurus, the inscription
of his seal contained the word deg (the kettle in Guru ka Langar
signifying charity) and tegh (the sword of the Khalsa signifying
victory).
Banda Singh's rule, though short-lived, had
a far-reaching impact on the history of the Punjab. With it began
the decay of the Mughal authority and the demolition of the feudal
system of society it had created. Bands Singh abolished the Zamindari
system and made the tillers masters of the land by conferring upon
them proprietory rights. He was liberal in his treatment of Hindus
and Muslims many of whom joined the Sikh faith and took
up arms under him.
In the summer of 1710, Banda Singh crossed the
Yamuna and seized Saharanpur. On his arrival at Nanauta on 11 July
1710, crowds of Gujjars, who called themselves Nanakpanthis swelled
his ranks, but he had to return to the Punjab, without making any
further conquest in the Gangetic valley.
In the Punjab, he took Batala and Kalanaur,
marched towards Lahore, while a contingent proceeded to occupy the
city and parganah of Pathankot. Seized with terror, Sayyid Aslam,
the governor of Lahore, shut himself up in the Fort. Cries of jihad
or religious war against the Sikhs proved of little avail and Banda
Singh inflicted a crushing defeat upon the gathered host at the
village of Bhiloval. Except for the city of Lahore, the whole of
Majha and Riarki had fallen into his hands.On 3 October 1710, he
occupied Rahoh in the Jalandhar Doab.
The Mughals Attack
Banda Singh's increasing influence roused
the ire of the Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah, who came northwards
from the Deccan, and commanded the governors of Delhi and Oudh and
other Mughal officers to punish the Sikhs. The order he issued on
10 December 1710 was a general warrant for the faujdars to kill
the worshippers of Nanak, i.e. Sikhs, wherever found (Nanakprastari
ra har ja kih ba yaband ba-qatl rasanand).
Even in face of this edict for wholesale destruction
of the Sikhs, Banda Singh maintained towards the Muslims generally
an attitude of tolerance. A report submitted to Emperor Bahadur
Shah stated that as many as five thousand Muslims of the neighbourhood
of Kalanaur and Batala had joined Banda Singh and that they were
allowed the fullest liberty to shout their religious call, azan,
and recite khutba and namaz, in the army of the Sikhs and that they
were properly looked after and fed.
In 1710, a massive imperial force drove the
Sikhs from Sirhind and other places to take shelter in the Fort
of Lohgarh in the submontane region. Here Banda Singh was closely
invested by sixty thousand horse and foot. For want of provisions,
the Sikhs were reduced to rigorous straits but on the night of 10
December 1710, Banda Singh made a desperate bid to escape and hacked
his way out of the imperial cordon.
Banda Singh was far from vanquished and, within
a fortnight of his escape from Lohgarh, he began to send out hukamnamas
exhorting the people to carry on the fight. He ransacked the submountainous
state of Bilaspur; Mandi, Kullu and Chamba submitted to his authority
of their own accord.
In June 1711, as he descended towards the plains
he was engaged in an action at Bahrampur near Jammu, in which the
Mughal troops were worsted. Banda Singh was, however, forced in
the end again to retreat into the hills.
After the death, on 28 February 1712, of Emperor Bahadur Shah, the
war of succession for the imperial throne and the disturbed state
of affairs in Delhi brought Banda Singh some respite, but Farrukh-Siyar
who ascended the throne of Delhi in 1713 accelerated the campaign
against the Sikhs.
They were hounded out of the plains where Banda Singh had reoccupied
Sadhaura and Lohgarh. Their main column,
led by Banda Singh, was subjected to a most stringent siege at the
village of Gurdas-Nangal, about six kilometres from Gurdaspur.
The supplies having run out, the Sikhs
suffered great hardship and lived on animal flesh which they had
to eat raw owing to lack of firewood. To quote the Muslim diarist
of the time, Khafi Khan, "Many died of dysentary and privation
.... When all the grass was gone, they gathered leaves from the
trees. When these were consumed, they stripped the bark and broke
off the small shoots, dried them, ground them and used them instead
of flour, thus keeping body and soul together. They collected the
bones of animals and used them in the same way. Some assert that
they saw a few of the Sikhs cut flesh from their own thighs, roast
it, and eat it."
The capture and Execution of Banda Singh
and his Troops
The supplies having run out, the Sikhs
suffered great hardship and lived on animal flesh which they had
to eat raw owing to lack of firewood. To quote the Muslim diarist
of the time, Khafi Khan,
"Many died of dysentary
and privation .... When all the grass was gone, they gathered leaves
from the trees. When these were consumed, they stripped the bark
and broke off the small shoots, dried them, ground them and used
them instead of flour, thus keeping body and soul together. They
collected the bones of animals and used them in the same way. Some
assert that they saw a few of the Sikhs cut flesh from their own
thighs, roast it, and eat it."
For eight long months, the garrison resisted
the siege under these gruesome conditions. The royal armies at last
broke through and captured Banda Singh and his famishing companions
on 7 December 1715.
They were at first taken to and paraded in the streets of Lahore
and then sent to Delhi where they arrived on 27 February 1716. The
cavalcade to the imperial capital was a grisly sight. Besides 740
prisoners in heavy chains, it comprised seven hundred cartloads
of the heads of the Sikhs with another 2,000 stuck upon pikes.
By Farrukh-Siyar's order Banda Singh and some two dozen leading
Sikhs were imprisoned in the Fort, while the remaining 694 were
made over to the kotwal, Sarbrah Khan, to be executed at the Kotwali
Chabutra at the rate of a hundred a day.
Then Banda Singh Bahadur and his remaining companions were taken
to the tomb of Khwaja Qutb ud-Din Bakhtiyar Kaki, near the Qutb
Minar. There he was offered the choice between Islam and death.
Upon his refusal to renounce his faith, his four-year old son, Ajai
Singh, was hacked to pieces before his eyes. He himself was subjected
to the harshest torments. His eyes were pulled out and hands and
feet chopped off. His flesh was torn with red-hot pincers and finally
his body was cut up limb by limb. This occurred on 9 June 1716.
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